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Strida

Strida is a portable belt-driven folding bicycle with a distinctive 'A'-shaped collapsible frame, designed by British engineer and designer Mark Sanders. The first model, Strida 1, was released in 1987 and the latest, Strida 5.2, in 2009.

Strida 3 (upgrade kit installed)
Strida 5 Folded
Strida owners in Taipei
The folded bike - a "wheeled walking stick"

Advantages Edit

The Strida folds into a "wheeled walking-stick" that can be pushed along, much like a folded pram/baby-buggy whose folding concept provided the inspiration for the design.

Other notable characteristics include:

  • a greaseless kevlar belt that replaces the traditional chain drive to avoid mess (see belt-driven bicycle)
  • minimalist design (single speed, aluminium-triangle frame, etc.)
  • low-maintenance brakes (drum brakes on the Strida 1, 2 and 3; disc brakes on the Strida 5 and later versions)
  • 16-inch wheels, upgradable to 18-inch wheels.

Disadvantages Edit

The single sided wheel mountings and belt drive make fitting gears (e.g. dérailleur or hub gears) more difficult than on chain driven bikes with conventional forks. The use of front mounted Schlumpf gear gets round this problem. Hobbyists in Japan have fitted 5[1][2][3] and 7[4] speed gears.

History Edit

The Strida was the major project[5] for Mark Sanders's master's degree 1983 to 1985 at Imperial College London, and Royal College of Art. The course, IDE, (Industrial Design Engineering, now called Innovation Design Engineering[6]) was a joint course by both institutions for engineering graduates to specialise in combining creative engineering with creative industrial design. The project is recorded in detail in the master's degree thesis.[7] The aim of the project was to simplify bicycles and especially folding bicycles. It was inspired by the Maclaren baby buggy which folds into a thin form, with its wheels together at the end, so that can be rolled instead of being carried.

In 1985, Industrial Property Rights Ltd, (run by James Marshall,[8] former manager of golfer Greg Norman) licensed the design.[9] The name 'Strida' was suggested by the 8-year-old son of one of the company directors; this was adopted as it was preferred to the suggestion 'Blake' by a PR consultancy. Production of the Strida 1 started in 1986, originally in Springburn, Glasgow. The Strida was launched in Harrods, London in 1987.[10] Approximately 3,000 Strida 1s were made in Glasgow - these can be recognised by a welded steel rack, later replaced by a nylon injection moulded rack, which latter remains in production.

In 1988, production moved to Long Eaton in Nottingham (near the Raleigh Bicycle Company factory, which by then was in decline). Sturmey-Archer developed a 2-speed, front-mounted gear which was prototyped and tested but never made in production. The Strida won all three UK Cyclex Bicycle Innovation Awards in 1988[11] (Best New Product, Most Innovative, Best British Design). Approximately 17,000 Strida 1s were made in Nottingham.[12] Most were sold in Japan and UK, with smaller quantities in USA, Australia and Germany.

In 1991, production moved to Casa Hipolito, a Portuguese Manufacturer. At this time Strida Ltd. was developing a baby buggy as a second product.

By 1992, 25,000 Strida 1s had been produced.

In 1993, the British Technology Group BTG, a company that licenses and commercializes medical innovations and other UK technology, controlled the rights to Strida until 1995.

In 1997, Roland Plastics, a UK firm, purchased the rights to produce Strida and moved production back to Wickham market in the UK. It released the Strida 2 a year later.

In 2000, the Strida won I.D. Magazine’s Annual Design Award, Sail Magazine’s Pittman Award for Innovation and Safety, and the British Design Council Millennium product Award. Steedman Bass, of Boston USA, purchased the rights to produce the Strida. With Mark Sanders, Bass began development of the Strida 3 as described by The Open University course 'Design and designing' (T211).[13]

In 2002, in order to meet increased demand, Bass moved production to Taiwanese manufacturer Ming Cycle. Strida 3 was launched, with an inaugural shipment of 2000 units to Italy. Ming began to establish distributorships in Korea, Japan, Netherlands, France and the U.S.A. Development of the Strida 5 started.

In March 2006, Ming Cycle took over ownership of Strida rights.

In November 2006, a Strida 3 was featured on the UK television programme The Gadget Show,[14] alongside the Sinclair A-Bike.

In 2007 the Strida 5 won a design award at the Taipei International Bike Show.

A 2-speed gear option was added in 2009, based on the cableless, Schlumpf front crank operated epicyclic gearbox.[15]

The Strida 5 includes an upgrade kit of the Strida 3, and adds disc brakes, eccentric belt tensioner, metal spoked wheels and high pressure tyres.

Series Edit

The Strida is made by Ming Cycle in Taiwan. There was a key patent which covered the early Strida 1 onwards. The U.S. version of this patent was filed in 1986[16] and expired in 2006,[17] which means only the mechanism used in Strida 1 and 2 of the product is now in the public domain. Several other aspects of the latest Strida 3 to 5.x versions are currently covered by patents in various countries, including the folding handle bar system US7243573,[18] hub and locking system US7367632,[19] front joint system US7681900,[20] with other patents pending. The Patents, Trademark, Copyright and other IP are owned by Ming Cycle, Taiwan. Some components of the Series 3 to Series 5 machines are interchangeable but other significant components and sub-assemblies are not. Series 5 and Series 4 (Mini) machines have a freewheel mounted in the conventional position on the rear wheel (In Series 3 the freewheel, a commonly available Shimano 18t model, is part of the metal and plastic bottom bracket/crankset assembly) and a metal bottom bracket shell which incorporates an eccentric housing to adjust belt tension. Alternative folding handlebars which give more knee clearance for the taller rider are available for the Series 5; these may be retro-fitted in place of the standard folding handlebars on Series 3 and Series 4 (Mini).

  • Strida 1
  • Strida 2
    • Strida 2.5 (with folding handlebars)
  • Strida 3
    • Strida 3.2 (snubber bearing to prevent drive belt slippage)
    • Strida 3.3 (wire wheels)
  • Strida 5
    • Strida Special Edition
    • Strida Elite Edition
  • Strida Mini / Strida 4 (for smaller riders)
  • Strida SX (with 18" wheels, with upgraded 10 kg rated metal rack and metal butterfly action folding pedals)
  • Strida SD (2-speed version)
    • Strida MAS (Mark Sanders Special Edition)[21][22]
  • Strida LT (with glass fiber reinforced nylon wheels)
  • Strida EVO (3-speed version with Sturmey Archer kickback bottom bracket, available in 16" and 18" versions, both with the SX's improved rack and pedals.)

A number of unlicensed copies of Strida are manufactured in several countries (China, Thailand), and are sold with names such as "Folding bike Strida" or STRDA.[23] Ming Cycle continuously prosecutes importers of these non-genuine and intellectual property right infringing products.[24] In 2021 Mr Sanders said fakes greatly outnumber genuine Stridas.[25]

References Edit

  1. ^ http://www.senmuchan.mydns.jp/tar_image/zero_yodo04.jpg[bare URL image file]
  2. ^ http://www.senmuchan.mydns.jp/tar_image/zero_yodo05.jpg[bare URL image file]
  3. ^ "Free Dynamic DNS(DDNS) by POP3,IMAP4,FTP,HTTP-BASIC for Home Server, VPS | MyDNS.JP".
  4. ^ "Google Translate". Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  5. ^ "Blog Archive » Interview: Strida bike designer Mark Sanders". Dezeen. 3 February 2008. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  6. ^ "Royal College of Art | Innovation Design Engineering". Rca.ac.uk. 18 August 2007. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  7. ^ "Master's Thesis June 1985 - Strida". Issuu.com. 29 June 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  8. ^ "Acquaintance of Greg Norman and Muhammad Ali discusses his business in Gloucestershire". SouthWest Business. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  9. ^ "Business Plan December 1985 - Strida". Issuu.com. 29 June 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  10. ^ "Picasa Web Albums - Mark Sanders - Strida Archiv". 24 June 1985. Retrieved 22 December 2010.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "Picasa Web Albums - Mark Sanders - Strida Archiv". 24 June 1985. Retrieved 22 December 2010.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "Strida Areaware". Strida.us. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  13. ^ "Folding bike re-invented". YouTube. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  14. ^ "A-Bike & Strida Folding Bikes Tested". YouTube. 13 November 2006. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  15. ^ http://www.schlumpf.ch/hp/sd/sd_engl_technische_daten.htm
  16. ^ https://www.google.com/patents/about?id=XE4wAAAAEBAJ&dq=4718688[dead link]
  17. ^ http://www.freepatentsonline.com/help/item/When-does-a-patent-expire.html
  18. ^ https://www.google.com/patents/about?id=4pOAAAAAEBAJ&dq=7243573[dead link]
  19. ^ https://www.google.com/patents/about?id=BcipAAAAEBAJ&dq=7367632[dead link]
  20. ^ https://www.google.com/patents/about?id=_izVAAAAEBAJ&dq=7681900[dead link]
  21. ^ "News". STRIDA. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  22. ^ "Strida MAS upgraded". A Basketful Of Papayas. 20 November 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  23. ^ "Strida Folding Bikes,Strida Foldable Bicycles 5.0,1.0,2.0,3.0,4.0". China-strida.com. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  24. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 13 August 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. ^ "Fake folders – how Brompton and Strida tackle the copiers". BikeBiz. 28 May 2018. Retrieved 16 January 2022.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Ming Cycle Strida Manufacturer
  • Pre-Strida, RCA bike & young inventor in 1985 on YouTube
  • Masters' Thesis June 1985 - Strida Description of the design and engineering of the bike that was later to become 'Strida'. Thesis for Imperial College, and Royal College of Art's joint master's degree in Industrial design Engineering (IDE)
  • Business Plan December 1985 - Strida
  • Strida 3 speeds - Slideshow on YouTube

strida, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, assist, fo. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Strida is a portable belt driven folding bicycle with a distinctive A shaped collapsible frame designed by British engineer and designer Mark Sanders The first model Strida 1 was released in 1987 and the latest Strida 5 2 in 2009 Strida 3 upgrade kit installed Strida 5 FoldedStrida owners in TaipeiThe folded bike a wheeled walking stick Contents 1 Advantages 2 Disadvantages 3 History 4 Series 5 References 6 External linksAdvantages EditThe Strida folds into a wheeled walking stick that can be pushed along much like a folded pram baby buggy whose folding concept provided the inspiration for the design Other notable characteristics include a greaseless kevlar belt that replaces the traditional chain drive to avoid mess see belt driven bicycle minimalist design single speed aluminium triangle frame etc low maintenance brakes drum brakes on the Strida 1 2 and 3 disc brakes on the Strida 5 and later versions 16 inch wheels upgradable to 18 inch wheels Disadvantages EditThe single sided wheel mountings and belt drive make fitting gears e g derailleur or hub gears more difficult than on chain driven bikes with conventional forks The use of front mounted Schlumpf gear gets round this problem Hobbyists in Japan have fitted 5 1 2 3 and 7 4 speed gears History EditThe Strida was the major project 5 for Mark Sanders s master s degree 1983 to 1985 at Imperial College London and Royal College of Art The course IDE Industrial Design Engineering now called Innovation Design Engineering 6 was a joint course by both institutions for engineering graduates to specialise in combining creative engineering with creative industrial design The project is recorded in detail in the master s degree thesis 7 The aim of the project was to simplify bicycles and especially folding bicycles It was inspired by the Maclaren baby buggy which folds into a thin form with its wheels together at the end so that can be rolled instead of being carried In 1985 Industrial Property Rights Ltd run by James Marshall 8 former manager of golfer Greg Norman licensed the design 9 The name Strida was suggested by the 8 year old son of one of the company directors this was adopted as it was preferred to the suggestion Blake by a PR consultancy Production of the Strida 1 started in 1986 originally in Springburn Glasgow The Strida was launched in Harrods London in 1987 10 Approximately 3 000 Strida 1s were made in Glasgow these can be recognised by a welded steel rack later replaced by a nylon injection moulded rack which latter remains in production In 1988 production moved to Long Eaton in Nottingham near the Raleigh Bicycle Company factory which by then was in decline Sturmey Archer developed a 2 speed front mounted gear which was prototyped and tested but never made in production The Strida won all three UK Cyclex Bicycle Innovation Awards in 1988 11 Best New Product Most Innovative Best British Design Approximately 17 000 Strida 1s were made in Nottingham 12 Most were sold in Japan and UK with smaller quantities in USA Australia and Germany In 1991 production moved to Casa Hipolito a Portuguese Manufacturer At this time Strida Ltd was developing a baby buggy as a second product By 1992 25 000 Strida 1s had been produced In 1993 the British Technology Group BTG a company that licenses and commercializes medical innovations and other UK technology controlled the rights to Strida until 1995 In 1997 Roland Plastics a UK firm purchased the rights to produce Strida and moved production back to Wickham market in the UK It released the Strida 2 a year later In 2000 the Strida won I D Magazine s Annual Design Award Sail Magazine s Pittman Award for Innovation and Safety and the British Design Council Millennium product Award Steedman Bass of Boston USA purchased the rights to produce the Strida With Mark Sanders Bass began development of the Strida 3 as described by The Open University course Design and designing T211 13 In 2002 in order to meet increased demand Bass moved production to Taiwanese manufacturer Ming Cycle Strida 3 was launched with an inaugural shipment of 2000 units to Italy Ming began to establish distributorships in Korea Japan Netherlands France and the U S A Development of the Strida 5 started In March 2006 Ming Cycle took over ownership of Strida rights In November 2006 a Strida 3 was featured on the UK television programme The Gadget Show 14 alongside the Sinclair A Bike In 2007 the Strida 5 won a design award at the Taipei International Bike Show A 2 speed gear option was added in 2009 based on the cableless Schlumpf front crank operated epicyclic gearbox 15 The Strida 5 includes an upgrade kit of the Strida 3 and adds disc brakes eccentric belt tensioner metal spoked wheels and high pressure tyres Series EditThe Strida is made by Ming Cycle in Taiwan There was a key patent which covered the early Strida 1 onwards The U S version of this patent was filed in 1986 16 and expired in 2006 17 which means only the mechanism used in Strida 1 and 2 of the product is now in the public domain Several other aspects of the latest Strida 3 to 5 x versions are currently covered by patents in various countries including the folding handle bar system US7243573 18 hub and locking system US7367632 19 front joint system US7681900 20 with other patents pending The Patents Trademark Copyright and other IP are owned by Ming Cycle Taiwan Some components of the Series 3 to Series 5 machines are interchangeable but other significant components and sub assemblies are not Series 5 and Series 4 Mini machines have a freewheel mounted in the conventional position on the rear wheel In Series 3 the freewheel a commonly available Shimano 18t model is part of the metal and plastic bottom bracket crankset assembly and a metal bottom bracket shell which incorporates an eccentric housing to adjust belt tension Alternative folding handlebars which give more knee clearance for the taller rider are available for the Series 5 these may be retro fitted in place of the standard folding handlebars on Series 3 and Series 4 Mini Strida 1 Strida 2 Strida 2 5 with folding handlebars Strida 3 Strida 3 2 snubber bearing to prevent drive belt slippage Strida 3 3 wire wheels Strida 5 Strida Special Edition Strida Elite Edition Strida Mini Strida 4 for smaller riders Strida SX with 18 wheels with upgraded 10 kg rated metal rack and metal butterfly action folding pedals Strida SD 2 speed version Strida MAS Mark Sanders Special Edition 21 22 Strida LT with glass fiber reinforced nylon wheels Strida EVO 3 speed version with Sturmey Archer kickback bottom bracket available in 16 and 18 versions both with the SX s improved rack and pedals A number of unlicensed copies of Strida are manufactured in several countries China Thailand and are sold with names such as Folding bike Strida or STRDA 23 Ming Cycle continuously prosecutes importers of these non genuine and intellectual property right infringing products 24 In 2021 Mr Sanders said fakes greatly outnumber genuine Stridas 25 References Edit http www senmuchan mydns jp tar image zero yodo04 jpg bare URL image file http www senmuchan mydns jp tar image zero yodo05 jpg bare URL image file Free Dynamic DNS DDNS by POP3 IMAP4 FTP HTTP BASIC for Home Server VPS MyDNS JP Google Translate Retrieved 22 December 2010 Blog Archive Interview Strida bike designer Mark Sanders Dezeen 3 February 2008 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Royal College of Art Innovation Design Engineering Rca ac uk 18 August 2007 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Master s Thesis June 1985 Strida Issuu com 29 June 2010 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Acquaintance of Greg Norman and Muhammad Ali discusses his business in Gloucestershire SouthWest Business 30 July 2014 Retrieved 14 July 2015 Business Plan December 1985 Strida Issuu com 29 June 2010 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Picasa Web Albums Mark Sanders Strida Archiv 24 June 1985 Retrieved 22 December 2010 permanent dead link Picasa Web Albums Mark Sanders Strida Archiv 24 June 1985 Retrieved 22 December 2010 permanent dead link Strida Areaware Strida us Retrieved 22 December 2010 Folding bike re invented YouTube Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2010 A Bike amp Strida Folding Bikes Tested YouTube 13 November 2006 Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2010 http www schlumpf ch hp sd sd engl technische daten htm https www google com patents about id XE4wAAAAEBAJ amp dq 4718688 dead link http www freepatentsonline com help item When does a patent expire html https www google com patents about id 4pOAAAAAEBAJ amp dq 7243573 dead link https www google com patents about id BcipAAAAEBAJ amp dq 7367632 dead link https www google com patents about id izVAAAAEBAJ amp dq 7681900 dead link News STRIDA Retrieved 22 December 2010 Strida MAS upgraded A Basketful Of Papayas 20 November 2010 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Strida Folding Bikes Strida Foldable Bicycles 5 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 China strida com Retrieved 22 December 2010 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fake folders how Brompton and Strida tackle the copiers BikeBiz 28 May 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2022 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Strida Official website Ming Cycle Strida Manufacturer Pre Strida RCA bike amp young inventor in 1985 on YouTube Masters Thesis June 1985 Strida Description of the design and engineering of the bike that was later to become Strida Thesis for Imperial College and Royal College of Art s joint master s degree in Industrial design Engineering IDE Business Plan December 1985 Strida Strida 3 speeds Slideshow on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strida amp oldid 1172235180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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